Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Watch it, Sailor! is a 1961 black and white British comedy film directed by Wolf Rilla and starring Dennis Price, Liz Fraser and Irene Handl. [1] The screenplay was by Falkland L. Cary and Philip King based on their 1960 play of the same name, a sequel to their earlier play, Sailor Beware , filmed in 1956 .
One moment, 'Head Above Water' plays like a clanking melodrama, the next like a gallows comedy of corrupt yuppie manners. By the time the movie builds to a climactic sight gag involving two boats, a chain saw and a can of cement, the movie has lost its moorings and gone hopelessly adrift." [5]
The Dove is a 1974 American biographical film directed by Charles Jarrott.The picture was produced by Gregory Peck, the third and last feature film he produced. [2] [3]The drama is based on the real-life experiences of Robin Lee Graham, a young man who spent five years sailing around the world as a single-handed sailor, starting when he was 16 years old.
To save face, Bill refuses the bribe and throws the henchman into the harbor. Virginia takes his wages for safekeeping, but Bill gets drunk anyway to celebrate his new status as a hero, and Kelly scuttles his boat after he passes out. As Bill and Pico work to raise their boat, Virginia is horrified to see that the We're here is being sold at ...
Night Tide (1961) by Curtis Harrington. Night Tide is a 1961 American independent [2] [3] fantasy film sometimes considered to be a horror film, [4] [5] written and directed by Curtis Harrington and featuring Dennis Hopper in his first starring role. [6] It was filmed in 1960, premiered in 1961, but was held up from general release until 1963.
His music has enhanced scores of movie scores, from "The Big Lebowski," to more recently "St. Vincent." One film stuck with Dylan for decades: "The Gunfighter," starring Gregory Peck.
Image credits: Aquaticfilly0 #4. Us. We were to make a film retelling the story of Hamlet. It was supposed to be five minutes. Being the creative nutcases we were, we made a 22 minute film ...
NEW ORLEANS ‒ On the booziest street in America, news that the Surgeon General thinks alcohol should come with warning labels is being met with a resounding "meh."